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Civil Liberties & Civil Rights US Politics
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Civil Liberties & Civil Rights Definition/Distinction 1st Amendment Issues Rights of the Accused & Criminal Justice Civil Rights
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Definition Civil LibertiesCivil Rights
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Definition Civil Liberties -- Rights that need protection from the government Civil Rights -- Rights that need protection by the government
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Definition Judicial Review Marbury v. Madison (1803) Incorporation Theory Gitlow v. New York (1925)
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Definition Judicial Review: power of the Supreme Court to determine the meaning of the constitution Incorporation Theory: applying the protections of the Bill of Rights to the actions of state governments via the 14th Amendment
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1st Amendment Issues First Amendment rights include: Religious Freedom Free Speech Free Press Free Assembly
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1st Amendment Issues Religious Freedom has 2 components Anti-establishment Free Exercise
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Religious Freedom School Prayer? Mandatory? Daily bible readings? Moment of silent prayer? Moment of silence for non- religious reasons? No. Engel v. Vitale (1962) No. Abington School District v. Schempp (1963) No. Wallace v. Jaffree (1985) Yes. Brown v. Gwinnett County S.D. (1997)
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Religious Freedom Prayer outside of school Permissible to have religious leaders not affiliated with school at “official” school events? Permissible to have student led prayer at official school events? No (Lee v. Weisman [1992]) Yes. Santa Fe Independent S.D. v. Doe (2000) student led prayer okay, but can’t use PA system
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Religious Freedom Permissible to have school functions (e.g., graduation) in a church, with religious icons on display? To be determined; case from Tennessee working its way through the courts now
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Religious Freedom Display of Ten Commandments? *Permissible if part of other document display and not given special “pride of place” treatment (Van Orden v. Perry [2005]) Depends. Stone v. Graham (1980) -- display of Ten Commandments is permissible, but cannot be required or mandated by the state* McCreary County v. ACLU (2005) -- cannot mandate display of 10 commandments in courtrooms
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Religious Freedom Evolution vs. Creationism Edwards v. Aguillard (1987) -- states cannot mandate teaching of biblical creationism
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Religious Freedom Kitzmiller et. al. vs Dover Area School District (2005) State cannot mandate teaching of “Intelligent Design” in the science curriculum
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Religious Freedom Free Exercise Distinction between belief and practice Exemptions for religious groups for various regulatory requirements: faith healing immunization exemption reporting infectious disease exemption child neglect exemption licensing exemption People vs. Cole, 219 N.Y. 98, 113 N.E. 790 (1916) People vs. Vogelgesang, 221 N.Y. Reports 290 (1917). N.Y. Court of Appeals.
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Freedom of Expression Free speech provisions Permitted Restrictions Schenck v. United States (1919) - “clear and present danger” Gitlow v. New York (1925) - “bad tendency” Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) - “incitement to imminent lawlessness”
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Freedom of Expression “Beyond the Pale” unprotected speech Obscenity Fighting Words Heckler’s Veto Hate Speech Slander Advocate illegal activities
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Other Speech Rights “Symbolic” Speech and the First Amendment... protected or not? Yes Tinker v. Des Moines School District (1969)
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Other Speech Rights Symbolic Speech Is Flag burning protected? *It’s also the official way of disposing of old flags. Yes Texas v. Johnson (1989) flag burningflag burning as part of a peaceful protest is protected by the First Amendment*
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Freedom of the Press In general, same protections as speech with some permissible restrictions national security censorship permissible if protects national security
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Freedom of the Press “fair trial” issues protect witnesses protect accused
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Freedom of the Press Print vs Non-print media Print has greater protection Non-print, distinction between finite and non- finite transmission mode Broadcast vs cable/satellite More restriction on broadcast Licensing and rules
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Freedom of the Press “Beyond the Pale” unprotected press Libel Knowingly publish with reckless disregard for the truth statements known to be false and injurious to person’s character, reputation
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Freedom to Assemble Balance right to free association with right for public order Permissible for localities to require permits in order to protest
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Second Amendment One of the few remaining amendments in the Bill of Rights that has not been incorporated In District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) court ruled for the first time that gun ownership is an individual rather than a collective right.
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Third Amendment This amendment prohibits the federal government from commandeering private homes for the military in peacetime without consent of the owner. In time of war, however, it can happen with appropriate legislation.
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Rights of the Accused Founders were concerned with crime, but their concerns were different from ours Wanted to find ways to protect individuals from overambitious state activities Variety of provisions built into the Bill of Rights to make it more difficult for states to deprive people of their liberty
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Rights of the Accused Pretrial Rights 4th Amendment protections no unreasonable search & seizure police need warrant to search 5th Amendment protections no self-incrimination grand jury indictment
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Rights of the Accused Trial Rights habeas corpus -- accused must be brought before judge and be publicly informed of charges (Art. 1, sec. 9, clause i) right to counsel (6th Amendment) right to confront witnesses (6th Amendment)
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Rights of the Accused Trial Rights (continued) due process provisions (6th Amendment) speedy and public trial jury of peers presumption of innocence trial conducted in jurisdiction where crime is alleged to have occured
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Rights of the Accused Post Trial Rights no double jeopardy (5th Amendment) no cruel and unusual punishment (8th Amendment
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Rights of the Accused Key additions/amendations to basic rights Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) -- right to counsel even if can’t afford an attorney; state must provide one
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Rights of the Accused Mapp v. Ohio (1961) -- exclusionary rule; illegally obtained evidence is inadmissable at trial. "all evidence obtained by searches and seizures in violation of the Constitution is, by [the Fourth Amendment], inadmissible in a state court."
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Rights of the Accused Exceptions to Exclusionary Rule “Plain sight”: evidence not on a warrant but in “plain sight” of the police is admissable in court Alternative means: If police can demonstrate they would inevitably have found the evidence legally anyway, even though it was illegally obtained originally, the evidence is admissable “Good faith”: if police believe they are conducting a “reasonable” search, and a subsequent court rules that the search was in fact unreasonable, the evidence is admissable
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Rights of the Accused Miranda v. Arizona (1966) -- police must inform accused of rights prior to taking into custody
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Rights of the Accused Exceptions to Miranda: “Public Safety” Conviction possible if other evidence at trial would have been enough to convict, even if confession was coerced or suspect was not read Miranda rights Ambiguity Suspects must clearly state that they would like to speak to counsel or exercise other provisions of their Miranda rights
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Rights of the Accused Exceptions: War on Terror and enemy combatants Bush Administration argues that terrorists taken into custody are outside both international law (Geneva Conventions regarding Prisoners of War) and US civil law
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Death Penalty Death penalty and the 8th Amendent “cruel and unusual” refers to punishment that is excessive (punishment did not fit the crime) and needlessly inflicts suffering on the convict Furman v. Georgia (1972) Death penalty unconstitutional because its use was random and arbitrary
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Death Penalty Gregg v. Georgia (1976) States adopt, and court approves a “two step” process for capital cases Ring vs Arizona (2002) Only juries, not judges, can impose the death penalty Death Row statistics from the Bureau of Justice Statistics Death Row statistics
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Other Rights Privacy Rights Privacy not mentioned specifically in the Constitution or the Bill of Rights Griswold v. Connnecticut (1965) Privacy located in the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 9th amendments
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Other Rights Privacy and the USA Patriot Act allows government officials to secretly search a suspected terrorist house with special warrant allows government to monitor internet, phone conversation, banking, and book purchases with special warrant allows government to open mail with special warrant
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Privacy and the Patriot Act FBI must present evidence why warrant is necessary, but judge has no authority to reject warrant Individuals targeted by these investigations are forbidden to discuss investigation, including the facts of its existence, with anyone
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